<< festooning fetal >>

festoons Meaning in Bengali



 আম্রসার, পুষ্পের মাল্য, তোরণে পত্র,

Noun:

তোরণে পত্র, পুষ্পের মাল্য, আম্রসার,





festoons's Usage Examples:

with two festoons, circa 130-125 BC, in the Louvre Pair of festoons hanged in the mouth of a lion, upside a door from Paris Pair of festoons at the entrance.


They are harvested in late summer and, in September, characteristic festoons of pepper are hung on balconies and house walls throughout the communes.


bucranium, 2 BC Frieze with festoons and bucrania, in the Ephesus Archaeological Museum (Selçuk, Turkey) Bucranium with festoons on a Roman altar, circa 30-0.


arrangements, floral design includes making wreaths, nosegays, garlands, festoons, boutonnieres, corsages, and bows.


Baroque cartouche, with festoons, cornucopias and mascaron, 1645, the Metropolitan Museum of Art Lion cartouche.


Swags, husks, flutings, festoons, and rams' heads are amongst the common motifs applied to pieces of this.


various marks of brown color, submarginal round spots and lines forming festoons.


were made from glass decorated with various patterns, such as scallops, festoons or abstract patterns of rings or zigzags.


scrolls "apparently do not succumb to gravitational forces, as garlands and festoons do, or oppose them, in the manner of vertically growing trees.


In 1450 Giovanni, who had executed only the decorative festoons of the vault, died; the following year Vivarini also left the work, after.


Joining these legs are festoons of roses and leaves made in a variety of colored gold alloys and joined.


on the columns was transformed into a continuous frieze with griffins, festoons and foliage.


by ornate decorative facades covered with floral designs, chandeliers, festoons, fantastic creatures and all sorts of configurations.


Hyalomma are larger in size and do not have protective shields (indistinct festoons), but have eyes and banded legs.


cascade or tail, is a vertical pleated piece of window treatment used with festoons or swags along the top of a window on the inside of a building.


sometimes epiphytic, climbing to 20 m, often to the canopy and hanging in festoons.


” “The most recent version of spider girandoles were festoons and garlands of tissue which were stretched starwise at the ceiling.


Above all the arches are inset panels with festoons while the blank windows and niches have medallions.


The trapezoid-shaped facade dates to 1660 and is richly decorated with festoons, two oeil-de-boeuf-windows and niches with arched tops, some stretching.


Smithsonian Design Museum (New York City) Illustrations of Ionic pilasters with festoons on their capitals, from Germany, in the Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design.



Synonyms:

embellishment;

Antonyms:

understate; worsen;

festoons's Meaning in Other Sites